Popeye wants to have a backyard barbecue with Olive Oyl, but is continually interrupted by a scheming Brutus, a hungry Wimpy and a crying Sweet Pea. Popeye, Olive and Wimpy end up on the moon with ...
Brutus swindles Olive Oyl out of her game show winnings with a worthless oil well. It's up to Popeye to grease the path towards a happy ending. Popeye and Olive stop by Brutus's Garage after running ...
Marcus Junius Brutus, Roman politician, one of the leaders in the conspiracy that assassinated Julius Caesar in 44 BCE. Brutus was the son of Marcus Junius Brutus (who was treacherously killed by Pompey the Great in 77) and Servilia (who later became Caesar’s lover).
Brutus was ultimately defeated by Caesar's successors at the Battle of Philippi in 42 BCE and committed suicide shortly thereafter. He is alternately remembered as a noble man who acted in opposition to tyranny or as one of the most notorious traitors in history.
In William Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar," the most fascinating character isn't the power-hungry Caesar, but his trusted friend and murderer, Brutus. Caesar's famous almost-last words in the play, uttered with disbelief as Brutus plunges the final dagger into the Roman dictator, are "' Et tu, Brute? (You too, Brutus?) Then fall, Caesar!"
Brutus was born the son of a patrician and a wealthy plebeian. His mother, Servilia, the patrician, maintained a long, romantic, and adulterous relationship with Caesar, which was common...
Marcus Junius Brutus was a renowned Roman politician and a brilliant orator. Born into an illustrious family of politicians, Brutus held a series of government appointments throughout his career, and he even became one of the closest confidants of Gaius Julius Caesar.
Marcus Junius Brutus, a Roman senator, orchestrated the assassination of Julius Caesar, trying to preserve the Roman Republic. He ultimately faced defeat and committed suicide in 42 BCE. Marcus Junius Brutus—or simply “Brutus”—was one of the most enigmatic and infamous figures in Roman history.